RE: Kernel 2.5.6 Interactive performance

From: Charles Heselton (charles-heselton@cox.net)
Date: Sun Mar 10 2002 - 02:23:10 EST


I can understand that. This just seemed the most readily available
resource. All of you über-geeks out there...I appreciate your knowledge and
hard work.

Thanks,
Charles Heselton
Network Installer
Staffing Alternatives, Inc.
619.261.6866
charles_heselton@hotmail.com <mailto:charles_heselton@hotmail.com>

-----Original Message-----
From: Hua Zhong [mailto:hzhong@cisco.com]
Sent: Saturday, March 09, 2002 2235
To: charles-heselton@cox.net
Subject: Re: Kernel 2.5.6 Interactive performance

I suggest you subsribe to the kernelnewbies maillist instead. Start from
http://www.kernelnewbies.org.
It's much more useful for a newbie.

LKML is for developing linux kernel, not for tutoring how to use kernel.
Don't expect/ask those hackers
to speak in language easy to understand for everyone.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Charles Heselton" <charles-heselton@cox.net>
To: "Robert Love" <rml@tech9.net>; "Mike Fedyk" <mfedyk@matchmail.com>
Cc: "Dieter N?tzel" <Dieter.Nuetzel@hamburg.de>; "Dan Mann"
<mainlylinux@attbi.com>; "Linux Kernel List" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>;
"J.A. Magallon" <jamagallon@able.es>
Sent: Saturday, March 09, 2002 10:18 PM
Subject: RE: Kernel 2.5.6 Interactive performance

>
> Well, unfortunately, you guys are still talking a little above my head. I
> kind of understand what you are saying but not completely. Are the -aa
> and -ac patches? How do you install/run a patch? Are they tags to put in
> when compiling? What is VM28-vm30? All I've done so far is untar the
> tarballs from kernel.org (or wherever) and go from there. Finally started
> having success with it, but all this stuff that you guys are talking about
> on the development level is a little above me. Which, BTW, is partly why
I
> subscribed to the mailing list - to try to learn a little more. So could
> you guys be a little more specific in the explanations?
>
> Thanks,
> Charles Heselton
> Network Installer
> Staffing Alternatives, Inc.
> 619.261.6866
> charles_heselton@hotmail.com <mailto:charles_heselton@hotmail.com>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org
> [mailto:linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org]On Behalf Of Robert Love
> Sent: Saturday, March 09, 2002 2206
> To: Mike Fedyk
> Cc: charles-heselton@cox.net; Dieter N?tzel; Dan Mann; Linux Kernel
> List; J.A. Magallon
> Subject: Re: Kernel 2.5.6 Interactive performance
>
>
> On Sat, 2002-03-09 at 23:38, Mike Fedyk wrote:
>
> > On Sat, Mar 09, 2002 at 11:23:48PM -0500, Robert Love wrote:
> > > The 2.5 tree also has most of these toys, and is a better place for
this
> > > development IMO. Personally, I'd stay away from these all-in-one
silly
> > > patches that are floating around these days. Your safest bet is just
> > > stock 2.4.18 or whatever is latest, although the above addons are all
at
> > > varying levels of "stable" and "safe".
> > >
> >
> > Then what do you call -aa and -ac? ;)
> >
> > These "all-in-one" patches do make it harder to debug specific patches,
> but
> > it does create a wider audience for many patches that wouldn't be used
> > otherwise.
>
> I don't put -aa nor -ac in the same category as what I refer to above.
> Alan and Andrea's trees both contain an intelligent combination of
> useful patches, bug fixes, and code from Alan and Andrea themselves.
>
> The plethora of all-in-one every-patch-under-the-sun patchsets don't
> fall into the above category, in my opinion. They just mix various new
> feature patches. They do offer one benefit: much wider exposure for
> some potentially very useful patches. I have found, however, that they
> don't help the actual patch authors much since (a) they are mixed in
> with many other patches and possibly even erroneously merged and (b) the
> bug reports never make it upstream to the actual patch maintainers.
>
> Maybe I'm just annoyed by the even greater signal-to-noise ratio on lkml
> :-)
>
> Robert Love
>
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